How Will My Tips and Techniques Make You A Better Photographer?

Each day you’ll get a new photo tip in your email that will help you to take better photos. Even though my mini-course has over 21 tips, you’ll find yourself taking better shots by using just two or three tips! Imagine how great your photos will be after the 21st tip….

My tips for better photos are simple, well written, and easy to implement. But they’re astonishingly effective.

When zooming in on Point and Shoot cameras, your image can sometimes look all blurry and grainy. In this better photo tip, I tell you why, and how you can use a different zoom to get a crisp, clear image.

There’s a little known tip, used all the time by professionals, that results in a pleasing, nicely balanced photo. In this photography tip, I discuss what it is, and how incredibly easy it is to use in your own photos.

We all love photos of kids! They have such wonderful faces, and usually love to be in front of the camera. Unlike us adults who tend to shy away from cameras! But children can also be unpredictable, and for that you need some special skills as a photographer.

I know I keep saying it, but this is another tip (only available with digital cameras) that ensures you will always walk away from a party or gathering with some perfect shots. This beautifully simple photography tip is the main reason why I love shooting with digital.

Sick of the wait between when you press the shutter and when the shot is taken? It’s called shutter delay and is caused by your camera needing to focus on your subject. Guess what? The delay can be eliminated! Now my subjects haven’t moved out of frame before the shot is taken.

Flash isn’t just for night time. When I first discovered this simple photographic tip for daylight photography, I almost fell out of my chair! A flash helps to eliminate dark shadows on your subject. A picture with less shadows looks much better than one with dark subjects you can’t see.

This camera tip will help keep your photographs fresh and interesting to you as well as your audience. And as a bonus, you’ll suddenly start seeing more than what meets the eye, and your skills as photographer will grow.

Photography is all about light. It’s the action of light hitting the image sensor at the back of the camera that creates our shots. So it makes sense to look at the light around you before you compose your image.

And there are lots more secrets!

There are another 9 tips to make up the 21 day course covering subjects like Red Eye Reduction flash, Predefined Modes and using the LCD.

But it doesn’t stop there! I’ve expanded the course with some bonus video interviews and heaps more photo tips to keep you shooting for years.

I thank you, David, for providing this course, which is awesome. If people are serious enough about wanting to learn, they have the opportunity with this course. Ans I can confirm that it is and stays for FREE.
Kind regards,
Barbara Casack
South Africa